Coming soon: first international exhibition about Vasyl Stus! - Instytut Pileckiego

17.10.2024 () 18:30

Coming soon: first international exhibition about Vasyl Stus!

An exhibition about a forgotten Ukrainian and European freedom fighter!

“Stus” 

The first international exhibition about a forgotten Ukrainian and European  freedom fighter: Vasyl Stus was a poet, intellectual, Nobel prize Nominee and dissident from Ukraine who died defending the Ukrainian identity and language in the Soviet Union in 1985

Opening: 17.10, 18.30 | Pariser Platz 4A, 10117 Berlin | Registration: First international exhibition about Vasyl Stus (google.com)

Main Organizer: Pilecki-Institut Berlin 

Co-Organizer: Heinrich-Böll Stiftung, Stus Center 

Full and extended Press Release: Download here 


Stus might have first fallen in love with the rhythms and flows of the  Ukrainian language  when his mother sang him Ukrainian folk songs. In conjunction with his dissident freedom-loving instinct this love would define his life. Already in the 60s he decided to teach the Ukrainian language defying widespread soviet top-down russification policies. No wonder then this love also had him pay a huge price: Throughout the history of the UdSSR he was repeatedly arrested, his works and Ukrainian translations of German poetry forbidden, his activism in defense of the Ukrainian intelligentsia suppressed.

Vasyl Stus was born amidst the horrors of World War II surviving not only the Nazi occupation but also the harsh post-war times that brought about widespread hunger. The experience of hunger would haunt him till his very last day: Stus died embarking on a dry hunger strike. A few years before, he had already gone on a hunger strike to be allowed to see his dying father. This is an exhibition simultaneously telling the story of an undeservedly unknown European freedom fighter and that of a nation fighting for its right to breathe and exist.

By User:Lantuszka - File:EthnoCarpathians_22082017DolynaUA-26.jpg, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=72341072
By Official KGB photo from Stus file after arrest 1972 - National Archive of Ukraine, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=30508782
By Gerald Praschl - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=18353833
By ДмитрОст (uploader) - Own work, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=14697713

Indeed, Stus´s struggle for freedom was embedded in a centuries-long Russian insistence to not accept Ukrainianness as an independent identity. Hence not only Stus´s story is being told here, but also that of the underappreciated Ukrainian anti-Soviet dissident movement which to this day has remained at the outskirts of Europe´s collective memory.

These days Ukrainian poets once again have to fight for their nation´s independence and survival – this time they dropped their pen and picked up a gun joining the Ukrainian army. Some of them are shown in the exhibition reading out loud Stus´s poetry. The exhibition also includes a philosophical meditation on the nature of Stus´s activism:

Was he a fairytale-like hero or a real human being who proved able to develop a moral compass robust enough to protect freedom in the face of evil?

The list of contemporary contexts does, however, not stop here: Status was an admirer of both German and Polish culture, including both languages, the countries´ writers and, in particular, the Polish anticommunist resistance movements. In his afterlife Stus´s affection for both countries has inspired a cooperation between a Polish, German and Ukrainian organization. An alliance which is so desperately needed in today´s Europe!

By Revontulet - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=28013084
By Qypchak - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=43710000

Main Organizer: Pilecki-Institut Berlin 

Co-Organizer: Heinrich Böll Stiftung, Stus Center 


Credits

Curator: Eva Yakubovska 

Idea: Hanna Radziejowska      

Researcher: Margarita Yegorchenko

Architector: Oleksandr Burlaka

Graphic Designer: Valeria Guievska

Consultation: Dmytro Stus, Kateryna Gryshchenko, The Museum of Sixties, Heinrich-Böll-Archiv Köln, the team of the documentary film "The Black Candle of the Light Road", Radomyr Mokryk

Text: Yurii Prokhasko, Margarita Yegorchenko, Eva Yakubovska